Page:Terræ-filius- or, the Secret History of the University of Oxford.djvu/59

 w Terra-Filius. "t;ne buildings at .alii-Souls and Chrifi-Ohu�h col. ,' lefts, tho' long at a and, were now like to go "oi that contri.bufions came in apace l that ea "day brought w:th it its benera&ion; and there- ,' fore, the ma 0/7 God doubted not but that very "loon oxford vould be jught tear, wen i Oxford. "In this, and in th!s only I agreed with his Cora- "leney, our preaching advocate. "It is expe&ed here, that you will vindicat "yourlf againR this gro/i, foam. ing divine, whole ,' name I need not mention; it s fufficient to tell "you that he is a grave * H�,t of a college. if ,' you do your felfjultice in this, you {hall hae "more intelligence from ' .Where is not a wore! in the oelifts language, which bas more envy and ill-will attending it, than Reformation: it has indeed a terrible found, and ons much uneafine/i and ill humour in the minds -. o5 my loving countrymen and fellow-fubjeCts. Re. formatica neceffarily implies corruption.and moll pe6- pie are as loath to 'hear of tl,eir own faults, as they te willing to difcover tho�e ol; others. I never card .of any Re.rmation either in church or date, ubliek or rivate, but what was ttrenuoufly o po- P p. P {id by thole, whom it a.&ed molt, with popular d:mour, and unjutt infinuauons. A madman never thinks himfell mad; and a le:vgate bird can't abide to hear of the Seons. The bed: men, and .the belt things in the world, have, moil of them, rocknames fix'd upon them, to

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